ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:.
1. Comment on papers presented at the commercial law and human rights
conference, by Sir Anthony Mason.
2. Human rights as legally binding or merely relevant, by B David Kinley.
3. Corporations and human rights, by Stephen Bottomley.
4. The business case for human rights – the amnesty international perspective,
by Rory Sullivan and Des Hogan.
5. Human rights and global business, by Robert McCorquodale.
6. Human rights and transnational litigation – interesting points of
intersection, by Andrew Bell.
7. Corporate governance and sexual harassment, by Christine Parker and Leon
Wolff.
8. The human rights act 1998 and commercial law, by James Strachan.
9. Intellectual property and human rights, by Sam Ricketson.
10. The rights to food, health and intellectual property in the era of
"biogopolies", by Peter Drahos.
11. Equality, freedom and democracy – tax law and the Canadian charter of
rights and freedoms, by Claire Young; 12. Administrative law, commerce and
human rights, by John McMillan.
13. Labour law and human rights, by Phillipa Weeks.
14. Native title in commercial practice – a question of human rights or risk
management?, by Bryan Horrigan.

ABSTRACT: English contributions:.
1. The right to humanitarian assistance, by Yoram Dinstein (chapter 16).
2. The right to free elections - international election observations as a
means towards implementation, by John Hartland (chapter 19).
3. Africa and human rights since Karel Vasak's three generations, by Kofi
Kumado (chapter 21).
4. The inherent right to life and its realization in Poland, by Adam Lopatka
(chapter 22).
5. The right to be represented in Parliament, by Manuel Medina Ortega (chapter
24).
6. The right of peoples to peace, by Marek Thee (chapter 28).
7. Human rights require responsibilities and duties, by Asbjørn Eide (chapter
40).
8. Human rights and human duties: do we need a declaration of human
responsibilities? Some personal observations, by Tom McCarthy (chapter 43).
9. Evocation of an "unknown" procedure concerning human rights protection by
UNESCO, by Mieczyslaw Paszkowski (chapter 45).
10. Some reflections on the role of NGOs in the promotion and protection of
human rights, by Janusz Symonides (chapter 53).
11. The endless task of human rights implementation, by Klaus Törnudd (chapter
54).
12. Human rights and future generations, by Salvino Busuttil (chapter 59).
13. Human rights, humanitarian law and refugee law, by Jovan Patrnogic
(chapter 67).
14. The development of human rights related to biomedicine and the new
challenges for organ transplantation, by Carlos Maria Romeo-Casabona (chapter
69).

ABSTRACT: Contents:.
Introduction- Human Rights and Equity in Cyberspace.
Pixels, Pimps and Prostitutes: Human Rights and the Cyber Sex Trade.
The New Face of Child Pornography.
Regulating Hatred.
Free Expression and Defamation.
Internet Service Providers and Liability.
The Digital Divide: Why the 'the' is misleading.
Filtering, Blocking and Rating: Chaperones or Censorship?.
Firewalls and Power: An Overview of Global State Censorship of the Internet.
Cyber Property.
Virtual Sit-Ins, Civil Disobedience and Cyberterrorism.
Privacy: Charting its Developments and Prospects.
Employee Surveillance.
Privacy, Surveillance and Identity.
Should States Have a Right to Informational Privacy?.
Code, Access and Control.
Biotechnology and Rights: Where We are Coming From and Where We are Going?

NOTE (GENERAL): Convention on biological diversity, Cartagena protocol on
biosafety, BWC, CWC, Convention for the protection of human rights and dignity
of the human being with regards to the application of biology and medicine,
ECHR, Geneva conventions, ICESCR, EU constitutional treaty